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SPARTINA SPECIES ZONATION ALONG AN ESTUARINE GRADIENT IN GEORGIA PDF

214 Pages·2004·4.68 MB·English
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SPARTINA SPECIES ZONATION ALONG AN ESTUARINE GRADIENT IN GEORGIA: EXPLORING MECHANISMS CONTROLLING DISTRIBUTION by SUSAN N. WHITE (Under the Direction of Merryl Alber) ABSTRACT The general paradigm for the observed plant zonation in salt marshes is that a combination of abiotic stress and competition drive vegetation patterns within a single marsh, but there have been few studies investigating the bankside vegetation changes that occur along the longitudinal salinity gradient of estuaries. The main objectives of the research presented in this dissertation were to examine whether the same controls that explain the distribution of Spartina alterniflora in the salt marsh can be applied without modification to a longitudinal salinity gradient and to evaluate changes in Spartina distributions under drought conditions. Reciprocal transplant studies, greenhouse experiments, species removals in mixed Spartina stands, and vegetation surveys were conducted in the estuary of the Altamaha River, GA, where S. cynosusroides occurs upstream of S. alterniflora. In reciprocal transplant experiments, each plant survived and performed best in its natural habitat. The presence of conspecific neighbors slightly reduced S. alterniflora plant performance in the salt marsh whereas S. cynosuroides showed little response in either environment. The results of these and other experiments suggest the lower estuarine distribution of Spartina cynosuroides is controlled by abiotic conditions (salinity or sulfide concentrations). The upper estuarine distribution of S. alterniflora is not well understood, but seems to also be primarily controlled by abiotic factors (possibly a sulfate requirement). These outcomes challenge results from previous investigations of zonation controls in salt marshes and suggest that modifications to the salt marsh paradigm are necessary when describing vegetation distribution along an estuarine gradient. During an extended drought (2000-2002), Spartina alterniflora density increased to a greater extent than S. cynosuroides in mixed stands and the location where Spartina cover was 50 % S. cynosuroides and 50 % S. alterniflora shifted approximately 3 km upriver, suggesting that Spartina communities can respond rapidly to increasing estuarine salinity. These studies improve our understanding of the ecological linkages in estuaries and can aid coastal policymakers in making better management decisions and predictions concerning how changes in freshwater inflow might impact the distribution of estuarine organisms. INDEX WORDS: Spartina alterniflora, Spartina cynosuroides, Plant zonation, Freshwater inflow, Salt marsh, Brackish marsh, Altamaha River estuary, Georgia coast SPARTINA SPECIES ZONATION ALONG AN ESTUARINE GRADIENT IN GEORGIA: EXPLORING MECHANISMS CONTROLLING DISTRIBUTION by SUSAN N. WHITE B.S., Duke University, 1997 A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of The University of Georgia in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY ATHENS, GEORGIA 2004 © 2004 Susan N. White All Rights Reserved SPARTINA SPECIES ZONATION ALONG AN ESTUARINE GRADIENT IN GEORGIA: EXPLORING MECHANISMS CONTROLLING DISTRIBUTION by SUSAN N. WHITE Major Professor: Merryl Alber Committee: Alice Chalmers Lisa Donovan Samantha Joye Steve Pennings Catherine Pringle Electronic Version Approved: Maureen Grasso Dean of the Graduate School The University of Georgia August 2004 DEDICATION For their unwavering encouragement, realistic perspectives, and endless love, I dedicate this dissertation to my parents, Richard and Norma White, my grandmother, Katharine White, and my sister and brother, Karen and Richard White. iv TABLE OF CONTENTS Page CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION...................................................................................................1 OVERVIEW......................................................................................................1 SALT MARSH STUDIES.................................................................................2 BRACKISH MARSH STUDIES.......................................................................6 OBJECTIVES....................................................................................................8 LITERATURE CITED......................................................................................9 2 EXTENDING THE SALT MARSH PARADIGM: CONTROLS OF SPARTINA DISTRIBUTIONS ALONG A GEORGIA ESTUARINE GRADIENT...............16 INTRODUCTION...........................................................................................16 METHODS......................................................................................................23 RESULTS........................................................................................................28 DISCUSSION..................................................................................................34 LITERATURE CITED....................................................................................43 3 SPARTINA ALTERNIFLORA AND S. CYNOSUROIDES GROWTH RESPONSES UNDER MANIPULATED ABIOTIC AND BIOTIC CONDITIONS.......................................................................................................75 MATERIALS AND METHODS.....................................................................80 RESULTS........................................................................................................85 v DISCUSSION..................................................................................................94 CONCLUSION..............................................................................................109 LITERATURE CITED..................................................................................110 4 THE RESPONSE OF SPARTINA SPECIES TO PROLONGED DROUGHT IN THE ALTAMAHA RIVER ESTUARY.............................................................149 METHODS....................................................................................................153 RESULTS......................................................................................................158 DISCUSSION................................................................................................164 LITERATURE CITED..................................................................................176 5 CONCLUSIONS..................................................................................................197 vi CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION OVERVIEW The intertidal marshes that border riverine estuaries grade from freshwater marshes (where salinities are <0.5 practical salinity units, or psu), to brackish marshes (with salinities between 0.5-18 psu), to salt marshes (with salinities >18 psu), each of which has a characteristic vegetation pattern. The factors that control plant distribution patterns in salt marshes have received the most attention, and the generally accepted paradigm is that a combination of abiotic stress (specifically salinity) and competition drive vegetation patterns within a single marsh. However, there have been few studies investigating the vegetation changes that occur along the longitudinal salinity gradient of estuaries and it is unclear if the same mechanisms that control the distribution of plants in salt marshes can be applied. In the southeastern United States, Spartina cynosuroides dominates riverbank habitats in brackish areas, whereas S. alterniflora is dominant in salt marshes. The central goal of this dissertation was to investigate the mechanisms that control the distribution of Spartina species along the longitudinal axis of an estuary. Specific research objectives were to document the distribution of S. alterniflora and S. cynosuroides in response to changing inflow conditions and to determine the effects of both abiotic (salinity and sulfate concentrations) and biotic (neighbor presence) factors on plant performance. This type of study is important for improving our understanding of 1 the ecological linkages in estuaries and will also help us to predict how changes in estuarine salinity regimes, mediated by changes in freshwater inflow, might affect the distributions of estuarine organisms. SALT MARSH STUDIES Spartina alterniflora is the dominant plant species in southeastern United States salt marshes. Spartina alterniflora is tallest on the creekbank and plant height decreases with distance from the creekbank to upland areas where mixed marsh communities of S. alterniflora and Juncus romereianus are located. Early work focusing on plant community structure in salt marshes identified various abiotic mechanisms that structure these habitats, including plant response to salinity, inundation (resulting in anoxic sediments), and nutrient availability (Valiela and Teal 1974, Mendelssohn 1979, King et al. 1982, Howes et al. 1986, Pennings and Bertness 2001). More recent research has focused on combinations of the above abiotic mechanisms with biotic interactions (such as competition or facilitation) in order to more fully explain observed plant distributions in the field (Bertness and Ellison 1987, Bertness and Yeh 1994, Hacker and Gaines 1997, Gough and Grace 1998, Pennings and Bertness 2001). In the salt marsh, both inter- and intra-specific competition for light, nutrients and water influence plant community structure. However, competitive abilities are influenced by an organism’s physiological ability to tolerate environmental stressors. Several studies have found that competitively dominant organisms monopolize physically benign habitats while the less competitive (but often more physiologically hardy) organisms dominate physically stressful habitats (Connell and Slayter 1977, Adam 1990, Bertness and Pennings 2000). 2

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Spartina alterniflora tissue nutrient concentrations were comparable to previously reported values (Gallagher 1975, Linthurst and Seneca 1981, Ornes and Kaplan 1989,
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